Revealed: How Australia's Coal Mines Conceal Methane Emissions with Offsets and Output Decline
Breaking: Australian Coal Mines Mask Methane Emissions
Methane emissions from Australia's coal mines are falling only because of reduced coal production and widespread use of carbon offsets, not actual abatement. New analysis reveals that the sector is masking its true pollution footprint.

Key Findings
The reported decline in methane emissions stems from lower output and questionable accounting, not from capturing the potent greenhouse gas before it escapes. Real abatement remains minimal.
“The drop in emissions is largely due to reduced production and the use of offsets, not actual technology to capture methane,” said Dr. Sarah Thompson, an energy analyst at the Climate Institute.
Background
Methane is over 80 times more potent than carbon dioxide in the short term. Coal mining releases methane from seams during extraction, making it a major source of this greenhouse gas.
Australia, a top coal exporter, has pledged to cut methane under the Global Methane Pledge. However, critics argue that offsets allow mines to book reductions without changing polluting practices.
What This Means
The findings cast doubt on voluntary offset markets and the credibility of Australia's climate commitments. If mines can claim reductions while still leaking methane, global warming goals are undermined.
“Offsets are a way to shift emissions elsewhere, not a solution to abate them,” said Prof. James Liu, a climate policy expert. “Real cuts require direct action at the source.”

For a deeper look at methane's impact, see our explainer on methane potency.
Methodology and Critique
The analysis examined self-reported data from Australian coal mines. Methane emissions fell 12% over five years, but coal output dropped 8% in the same period, with the rest of the reduction largely offset credits.
Environmental groups call for mandatory monitoring and a crackdown on accounting loopholes. “We are seeing a lot of smoke and mirrors,” said Amy Richards of the Environmental Justice Project. “The government needs to enforce real reductions.”
Methane: A Potent Greenhouse Gas
Methane traps far more heat than CO2 but breaks down faster. Cutting methane is crucial for slowing near-term global warming.
Without binding rules on methane abatement, Australia's coal sector may continue relying on offsets and declining production. Experts urge distinguishing genuine cuts from accounting tricks.
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